2018 end of year releases

Thursday, 5 February 2015

Magic Thursday with Jess Anastasi

Why I’m a Shipper &
Fangirl and How it Helps My Writing

My name is Jess
Anastasi and I’m here to admit today that I am a shipper and a fangirl, and I
will own up to my addiction.

For those of you
not familiar with the terms, a shipper is someone who obsesses with a
particular relationship on a TV series, but can also apply to books, movies and
other types of couples. This from Urban Dictionary: “The term
"shipper" comes from supporting a (relation)ship. To ship something
means a person wants two characters to get together and/or shows support for
two characters already together. The term "ship" came from the
X-Files fandom, when fanfics were written about Mulder and Scully. The fans
then called themselves shippers. It quickly spread and is now the title a
person gives themselves if they believe two characters should or will be
together (The characters can be from anything: Books, Movies, Television, Video
Games, and even Actors/Actresses). It is not limited to the couple actually
happening, a person can ship something just because they enjoy the possibility
of them getting together or even just because they think they would look good
together.”

As for being a
fangirl, that kind of explains itself, but from Urban Dictionary: “A rabid breed
of human female who is obsessed with either a fictional character or an actor.
Similar to the breed of fanboy. Fangirls congregate at anime conventions and
livejournal. Have been known to glomp, grope, and tackle when encountering said
obsessions.”

I have never used
livejournal, been to an anime convention or had the opportunity to
groped the object of my obsession interest, but there are definitely a
few characters on TV I am big fan of.

As an example, it’s
well known among my friends that I’m a Dean-girl. I still remember the first
episode of Supernatural I saw on TV. I was addicted straight away and knew it
was going to be something really special. Ten seasons later, their story is
sadly coming to an end, but obviously things can’t last forever. Dean is a complex
character and his relationship with his brother Sam is a thorny web,
borderlining on unhealthy fixation. I am seriously not a fan of Wincest, but
can see why people ship Destiel. I guess it also doesn’t hurt that Jensen
Ackles is easy on the eye.

As for ships, the
number one on my list at the moment is Oliver and Felicity on Arrow. There is
lots of heated internet debate about these two. In the original comics,
Oliver/The Arrow ends up with his ex-girlfriend, Laurel, who also becomes the
Black Canary. Unfortunately for Oliver and Laurel on the TV series, they were
totally lacking any believable chemistry. And then along came Felicity. Her
character was meant to be an occasional regular, but she and Oliver worked off
each other so well, and fans loved her so much that the creators decided to
make her a main character. In recent months, Oliver admitted he loved

Felicity,
but did the old “its safer for you if we’re not together” thing.

The heated
internet debates come in because many die-hard old-school comic fans believe
that Oliver and Felicity’s relationship is doomed, because eventually he’ll end
up with Laurel, as per the comic books. However, the other half are arguing that
the TV series is an entirely separate entity that clearly doesn’t need to
follow the comic book canon (as highlighted by Felicity’s permanency in the
team and on the show) therefore Oliver and Felicity clearly belong together
forever and ever and ever. The end.

So, what does this
have to do with anything, you might be asking? Because I think most of my
obsession comes down to dissecting these characters and their relationships,
examine what works, what doesn’t, and why, to file away for future reference
when working on my own books. I love getting into the nitty-gritty emotional
stuff and watching the way these characters face up to their challenges. But I
also love the quiet moments, or the humorous moments. When balanced together in
story arc perfection, that’s when you’ve got something people will connect
with, something that people will keep coming back to.

As authors, how do
we translate this into our books? That’s something I’m still trying to work
out…

Available now from Entangled Publishing...

Escape Velocity

Ilari,
Brannon System, 2436

At
first, Dr. Sacha Dalton is simply curious about the prisoner of war admitted to
her med-lab...until she sees who it is. For Commander Kai Yang—the commander of
the battleship Valiant Knox—has long been thought dead. Killed in action. But
after almost a year and half, he's returned home. Returned to her.

Kai is recovering
from his ordeal and under the watchful care of Sacha, his childhood friend and
the widow of his best friend. Only now, their friendship has grown and deepened
into something far deeper, and far more complicated. Yet as Kai's body
recovers, his psyche remains broken. How could he ever be the man he was, and
the man Sacha deserves? But an intergalactic war has a way of forcing a man to
be the hero he was always meant to be...

1 comment:

Can I say - hello, Dean! I'm way behind in my Supernatural watching. Only at the beginning of season 8, I think.

I'm only at the beginning of season 2 of Arrow and I'm so glad they kept Felicity on. She's such a cool, funny, dorky character who is loveable and has a much more interesting relationship with Oliver than Laurel. Not that I don't like Laurel but I thought she went with Tommy and now, well that ain't happening.